I remember being in high school and reading Armageddon, the sixth novel by American author, Leon Uris. My parents had the book sitting in their bookcase and I was intrigued by its cover. I suppose I also felt the length of the book might be a challenge, one that would make me feel like a “grown up” reader. I completed reading the book but discovered I lacked enough background in history to fully appreciate it.
Now that I am “considerably” older, know more about history, and have traveled in Berlin, I thought I might enjoy the novel more this second time around. While true that I was able to make more sense of what I was reading, I was saddened to discover that Leon Uris is a lesser writer than I remembered him to be. His strength lies in his research and ability to provide an in-depth historic background to his story but--at least in this novel--his dialogue, characters, and even plot, are mediocre at best.
Leon Uris was born in 1924 and died in 2003. The author of several historical novels including Battle Cry, Mitla Pass, Mila 18, Topaz, QB VII, and The Haj, his best-known work is his third novel, Exodus, published in 1958. I read all these many years ago and, despite my experience re-reading Armageddon, would like to revisit at least Exodus.
Born in the United States to Jewish American parents, Uris never completed high school but joined the Marines at the age of 17 after the bombing of Pearl Harbor. Those experiences formed the basis of his first novel, Battle Cry, published in 1953.
After leaving the military, Uris wrote for a newspaper but, after selling an article to Esquire Magazine in 1950, decided to try his hand at writing books.
After finding success with his first two novels, a public relations person tasked with making Americans more enthusiastic about the new country encouraged Uris to write a novel about the new country. Uris who had an intense interest in Israel, sold an idea for a film to MGM Studio then spent two years researching and interviewing thousands of people. The result was his novel and film, Exodus, which introduced thousands of Americans to Zionism, a Jewish nation in Palestine, and the Arab-Jewish conflict.
Exodus was translated into several languages and became an international bestseller though it is clearly biased against the Palestinians who had long been in the land.
A few years later, Uris began writing Armageddon, a novel set in Berlin as World War II in Europe ended.
With meticulous research and detail, Uris explains how the subsequent division of territory among the British, French, American, and Soviet countries, gradually deteriorated as military and civilian personnel began to de-Nazify Germany and rebuild the country. Ending with the Soviet blockade of Berlin and the American airlift to supply the people during the harsh winter, Uris sets the scene for the forty years of the Cold War.
Though the book includes numerous characters, there are three major ones: 1) US Captain Sean O’Sullivan who is largely in charge of the rebuilding of Berlin. An American patriot, he despises the Germans and the Russians yet tries his best to be professional in his actions. 2) Soviet Igor Karlovy who is O’Sullivan’s counterpart. With hands tied by his superiors, Karlovy slowly comes to understand that not all Germans were Nazis. 3) Ernestine Falkenstein, the niece of the new mayor (Oberburgermeister) of Berlin who looks at the victors in contempt as they reshape Berlin and Germany but soon falls in love with O’Sullivan.
Though I was impressed by all the research behind the story and by Uris’s attempt to bring clarity to an incredibly complex historic event, I frequently felt the need to skim this book of more than 600 pages. I also found myself “bothered” by the “flag-waving” that tainted his research; Uris was clearly writing at a time well-into the Cold War. However, if you like historical fiction and novels about patriotism and World War II, this is one you might enjoy.